Sweden doesn't readily spring to mind when discussing global military powerhouses, but the European nation is far from being a pushover. In fact, the Swedish military—working in conjunction with a cadre of marquee manufacturers and five other European nations—is nearing completion on the world's first and only air-to-air missile that can strike targets on the other side of the horizon.

The MBDA Meteor BVRAAM (Beyond Visual-Range Air-to-Air Missile) was initially developed by the UK, though Germany, Italy, Spain, France, and Sweden joined the project shortly thereafter. The missiles are designed for use aboard the Eurofighter Typhoon and Gripen C/D and will be used to counter long-range airborne threats well before they threaten the nation's borders.

Each $2.2 million missile measures about 12 feet in length and 7 inches in diameter, weighs 400 pounds, and carries a blast-fragmentation warhead (though details on the the size of the package remain scarce). Its throttle-able ducted rocket (read: ramjet engine) uses a boron-heavy propellant mix to reportedly achieve a threefold increase in its specific impulse (the measure of a rocket's force—propellant consumption per unit of time) and a 300 percent larger no-escape zone than today's best ramjets like America's AGM-168 JAASM.

After months of toeing the "red line" set by US president Obama regarding the use of…
Read more Read more

Being 21st century weapons, they are of course part of the Internet of Things. Each Meteor is network connected, allowing it to not only receive command and directional updates when in flight, but also relay information such as its functional and kinematic status, multiple unit targeting info, and of terminal seeker lock-on.

And with successful test firings from a Saab Gripen this March, Sweden looks to become the first of the participatory nations to field the new Meteors when the country's Air Force receives its MS20 (Materiel System 20) combat systems update from Gripen later this year. [MBDA - Wiki - WSJ - Air Force Technology]